The deprojection of the surface brightness distribution of an axisymmetric galaxy does not have a unique solution unless the galaxy is viewed precisely edge-on. I present an algorithm that finds the full range of smooth axisymmetric density distributions consistent with a given surface brightness distribution and inclination angle, and use it to investigate the effects of this non-uniqueness on the line-of-sight velocity profiles (VPs) of two-integral models of both real and toy discy galaxies viewed at a range of inclination angles. Photometrically invisible face-on discs leave very clear signatures in the minor-axis VPs of the models (Gauss-Hermite coefficients h4 ≳ 0.1), provided the disc-to-bulge ratio is greater than about 3 per cent. I discuss the implications of these hitherto neglected discs for dynamical modelling.
CITATION STYLE
Magorrian, J. (1999). Kinematical signatures of hidden stellar discs. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 302(3), 530–536. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.1999.02135.x
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